acefox1:The episode with Michael Richards as the invisible burglar is amazing.

Not for his performance but for being in a show where not one but two other actors towered over him.

/Never realized how tall John Larroquette was before that scene. Dang!

Apparently a whole lot of the cast (Harry, Mac, Bull, and Dan) ranged from 6'3" to 6'8", and there was an episode called "Nuts About Harry" that guest starred James Cromwell and Kevin Peter Hall, who is better known as the Predator.

My nostalgia for The A-Team is probably what has kept me watching Burn Notice. Sure it has ridiculous and repetitive plots, but it's basically A-Team: Miami.

But unlike the A-Team....let's just say the plot changed a bit (won't spoil it for ya). The A-Team was still technically "on the run" in the last season or two.

I'm up to date on Burn Notice. The plot hasn't really change that much, even this season. They always a have their job of the week to do, along with minimal advancement of the master plot. Thankfully, the master plot finally ran out of "the bigger bad guy behind the bad guy", but it's still the same basic show.

Night Court had some great recurring characters on it. The Wheelers are a couple of the best. Personally, I always loved whenever John Astin showed up. Then there was Dan's homeless lackey for the first couple seasons.

I just saw John Larroquette do a guest role in some show and damn, he's still really good. He should be in more shiat.

Did you know that he was the prologue voice over in the original "Texas Chainsaw Massacre"?

There was an episode of Night Court where he was watching television, and you heard the prologue and he said, "Eh, I've seen this already."

Also, I absolutely loved him in "The John Larroquette Show." Then again, I'm a big fan of finding humor in dark places.

When I was a fan of Night Court in the 1980s, it was like my hobby was finding Larroquette's pre-Night Court roles. He had a couple of lines as an unmasked Klansman in the Twilight Zone movie. Also, this is him. And, of course, Stripes.

Markie Post was harder to find, but A&E, before the network became all "Look at the freakshow" all the time, they often played a crappy movie late at night called "Massarati and the Brain." "Hoarders" marathons were a step up.

Rose McGowan Loveslave:funniest NC moment was the guy with the disease that made him walk and talk slow. It took him 5 light changes to cross times square. Judge Harry's line" wow, I bet you know all the latest swear words"

"I have a card that explains my condition"searches for 2 minutes in jacket"other pocket"

damn you, I was going for that after the squeegee postJudging from his picture he was a hardcore motherfarking drinker and is probably lucky to have made it to 63, which really isn't as young as some people may think.

It's kind of a shame Spiner ended up getting somewhat typecast after TNG, but you take what comes I guess.

On the other hand, put him in makeup and uncredited, and he rocks the screen. (ID4, Dude, Where's My Car?)

I remember an episode where Hurricane Mel(!) hit NYC, and I rolled my eyes at that as sitcom silliness that 1) hurricanes don't come close to Manhattan and 2) they'll never get all the way to the "M"s in any given year.

/RIP Sitcom Producer Guy/Global Warming Prognosticator

Oh god, Grandma and the hot dog cart...she just kept going and going and going until she was just a dot in the sky.

God, I loved that show. In the episode where the woman goes into labor in the courtroom, Bull's line, "Don't worry, sir; we're professional bailiffs!" literally had me falling out of my chair laughing. Also, I think the first time I ever saw the scrumptious Ms. Sela Ward was on NC when she played a friend of Christine's. Thank you, Mr. Weege; may you R.I.P.